You've always said you'd visit Sri Lanka "Someday" well Someday is Today. Mountains, coast, national parks, world heritage and await you on this 14 day Sri Lanka rickshaw (tuk tuk) Tour. Our most requested ride, the Ocean Road, is right in the end of this trip of a lifetime. You will love the variety of landscapes. The roads have been picked enjoyment and It will be unforgettable memory for you!

Day 1

Anuradhapura

(Negombo to Anurahapura distance

Mi 106 / 170.8 Km

Anuradhapura has been made royal capital by the king Pandukabhaya in 380 BC. It remained residence and royal capital for 119 successive Singhalese kings till the year 1000 AD when it was abandoned and the capital moved to Polonnaruwa

Day 2

Mahiyangana

(Anuradhapura to Mahiyangana distance

Mi 103 / 165 Km

Mahiyanganaya is a town situated close to the Mahaweli River in Badulla District, Uva Province of Sri Lanka

Day 3

Kandy

(Mahiyangana to Kandy distance

Mi 47 / 76 Km

Kandy is a large city in central Sri Lanka. It's set on a plateau surrounded by mountains, which are home to tea plantations and biodiverse rainforest. The city's heart is scenic Kandy Lake (Bogambara Lake), popular for strolling. It's famed for its sacred Buddhist sites, including the Temple of the Tooth (Sri Dalada Maligawa) shrine, and for its Esala Perahera annual procession

Day 4

Nuwara Eliya

(Kandy to Nuwara Eliya distance

Mi 47 / 76. Km

Nuwara Eliya is a city in the hill country of the Central Province, Sri Lanka. Its name means "city on the plain" or "city of light"

Day 5

Ella

(Nuwara Eliya to Ella distance Mi

91/147 Km

Only 8 km from Bandarawela, this small town is used as a base for plenty of trekking expeditions to the surrounding countryside. A taste of the breathtaking scenery of Ella could be had, if you just walk into the Garden of the Grand Ella Motel (Formerly Ella Rest House)

Day 6

Arugam bay

(Ella to arugam bay distance

Mi 89 / 140.1 Km

Arugam Bay is a bay situated on the Indian Ocean in the dry zone of Sri Lanka's southeast coast. The bay is located 320 kilometres due east of Colombo, and approximately 4 kilometres south of the market town of Pottuvil

Day 7

Kataragama

(Arugam bay to Kataragama distance

Mi 89 / 136.5 Km

Kataragama is a pilgrimage town sacred to Buddhist, Hindu and indigenous Vedda people of Sri Lanka. People from South India also go there to worship.

Day 8

Tissamaharama

(Kataragama to Tissamaharama distance

Mi 11 / 16 Km

Tissamaharama is a town in Hambantota District, Southern Province, Sri Lanka

Day 9

Yala national park

(Tissamaharama to Yala national park distance

Mi 19 / 31 Km

Yala National Park is the most visited and second largest national park in Sri Lanka. The park consists of five blocks, two of which are now open to the public, and also adjoining parks

Day 10

Mirissa

(Tissamaharama to Mirissa distance

Mi 73 / 118.8 Km

Mirissa is a small town on the south coast of Sri Lanka, located in the Matara District of the Southern Province. It is approximately 240 kilometres south of Colombo and is situated at an elevation of 4 metres above the sea level

Day 11

Mirissa

Mirissa is a small town on the south coast of Sri Lanka, located in the Matara District of the Southern Province. It is approximately 240 kilometres south of Colombo and is situated at an elevation of 4 metres above the sea level

Day 12

Bopath Falls

Mirissa to Bopath Falls distance

Mi 109 / 170.1 Km

The name "Bopath Ella" has been given to the waterfall because of its shape. The water flows through a narrow gap in the rocks and then widens, forming the shape of a leaf of a "Bo"[1] tree which is the Sinhalese name for sacred fig (Ficus religiosa). "Path" means leaves of a tree and "Ella" means waterfall. Virgin forests with a rich biodiversity surround the waterfall.[2][3]
Bopath Ella is 30 metres (98 ft) high. It is formed from the Kuru Ganga, which is a tributary of the Kalu Ganga.

Day 13

Sripada (Adam's Peak)

Kitulgala (Bopath Falls to Adam's Peak distance

Mi 108 / 170 Km

Sripada is a 2,243 m tall conical mountain located in central Sri Lanka. It is well known for the Sri Pada, i.e., "sacred footprint", a 1.8 m rock formation near the summit, which in Buddhist